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In A Christmas Carol, Dickens shows us a cross-section of London society, for the very rich to the very poor at the time of year when the differences are.

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Presentation on theme: "In A Christmas Carol, Dickens shows us a cross-section of London society, for the very rich to the very poor at the time of year when the differences are."— Presentation transcript:

1 In A Christmas Carol, Dickens shows us a cross-section of London society, for the very rich to the very poor at the time of year when the differences are the most visible. In the story, Christmas is described as the “time, of all others, when Want is keenly felt, and Abundance rejoices.” The rich looked forward to resting, feasting and presents. The working poor would have Christmas day off, if they were lucky, and might scrape together a special meal. For the very poor, Christmas was just another day.

2 The Biblical Story According to the Christmas Bible story, Christ came down to earth from heaven to be born on Christmas, because of his love for humanity. So people felt that they should show love for others at Christmas to follow his example. The whole family went to church on Christmas day.

3 Family Christmas The English Christmas was at a low point when Dickens was young. Sometimes national newspapers did not even mention it. There was only one day’s vacation, and many people did not even get that. For the poor, Christmas was not a holiday. Well-off families, however, would exchange presents, enjoy games and music, and eat special meals with Christmas pudding and goose or turkey. The whole family played games at Christmas

4 Spirit of Christmas In 1843, there was an old custom of representing the spirit of Christmas by a jolly figure who brought gifts, food, and drink. Dickens borrowed from this tradition when he made the second of the Three Spirits a similar figure. The spirit of Christmas was understood, to be a spirit of love, plenty, friendship, comfort, food, and drink.

5 Twelfth Night The old tradition of celebrating Twelfth Night (January 6) as a night of feasting and merriment became part of the festival, as did the “twelfth-cake,” which would often have a lucky bean or coin baked into it. In many places this is the night when people take down their Christmas decorations. Twelfth Night celebrations included street musicians.

6 Christmas Carols These songs about the birth of Christ and the religious meaning of Christmas grew out of a nonreligious tradition of singing door-to- door at this time of year. Scrooge drives away the young carol-singer who sing “God bless you merry gentlemen” to him, showing how mean he is.

7 Mistletoe, Holly & Ivy In ancient times these evergreens were associated with pagan midwinter celebrations. They were soon incorporated into the Christian Christmas, and by the time A Christmas Carol was written, mistletoe, holly and ivy were accepted home decorations. Mistletoe on the “kissing bough” was the centerpiece of the decorations. Kissing the bough; the apple in the middle represents plenty.

8 New Christmas Customs In 1843, many of today’s favorite Christmas customs had not yet arrived in England. Fifty years later, all of the traditions we know became popular.

9 Gifts Christmas gifts were nothing like today’s extravaganza. Many poor children did not receive gifts. The children of well-off parents received presents

10 Cards Christmas cards were first printed in 1843 in England. Illustration from an early Christmas card.

11 Trees The Christmas tree was a tradition in Germany before the 1800’s. It became English tradition when Queen Victorian made it part of the royal Christmas because her husband was German. After the 1840’s many English families had a tree, if they could afford it.

12 Made in America The figure of Santa Claus arose from stories about Saint Nicholas, a saint popular with Dutch immigrants to America. His modern image was in 1822, by American poet Clement Clark Moore’s poem. “The Night Before Christmas.” Santa became popular in England in the 1870’s.

13 Return to Lesson Page


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